Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton (C), who clocked the fastest time to claim pole position, stands next to second placed Mercedes driver Valtteri Bottas (L) and third placed Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel after qualifying at the Paul Ricard racetrack in Le Castellet, southern France, on Saturday.(AP)

Lewis Hamilton claimed the 75th pole of his career as Mercedes dominated qualifying on the French Grand Prix’s return to Formula One.

Reigning world champion Hamilton trails Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel by a point this season, but he came out on top at Circuit Paul Ricard in a Q3 disrupted by a red flag as home hope Romain Grosjean crashed out.

And it was a Mercedes one-two as Hamilton pipped team-mate Valtteri Bottas, who looked to have done enough to start from the front.

The Briton, already leading when Grosjean’s crash at turn three temporarily halted proceedings, posted a best time of one minute and 30.029 seconds - 0.118s clear of Bottas.

Championship leader Vettel was left in third, with team-mate Kimi Raikkonen, who started from pole in the last French Grand Prix 10 years ago, in sixth behind Red Bull duo Max Verstappen and Daniel Ricciardo.

McLaren endured a difficult week, in which racing director Eric Boullier had to rubbish claims they issued staff bonuses in the form of Freddo chocolate, and matters did not improve on Saturday.